California Workplace Harassment Prevention Information
Sexual Harassment Prevention Training Course Objectives:
-
Recognizing harassment as inappropriate workplace behavior
-
Identifying the nature of sexual harassment
-
Recognizing that harassment because of any protected characteristic is prohibited
-
Identifying why workplace harassment is employment discrimination
-
Recognizing that all harassment should be reported
-
Recognizing that supervisors and managers have a special responsibility to report harassment
In recent years, the topic of sexual harassment in the workplace has been brought into the national spotlight, bringing with it renewed awareness about the serious and unacceptable nature of these actions and the severe consequences that follow.
Course Includes:
Customizable Policy Documents!
· Customize the policy templates
· Use for your business!
Workplace Harassment Prevention Online Course
Meets or exceeds training requirements for sexual harassment prevention in most jurisdictions!
- Interactive Online Lessons
- text
- audio
- video
- flashcards
- case studies
- online exam
- Certificate
- Train all your employees!
- Compliance training documents stored digitally in one place!
- Employee acknowledgement / proof of training available immediately upon course completion:
- print
- download
- access from employer account
The purpose of this training is to set forth a common understanding about what is and what is not acceptable in our workplace. This training will help you better understand what is considered sexual harassment. It will also show you how to report sexual harassment in your workplace, as well as your options for reporting workplace sexual harassment to external state and federal agencies that enforce anti-discrimination laws.
With this knowledge, all employees can engage in appropriate workplace behavior, avoid disciplinary action, know their rights, and feel secure that they are entitled to and can work in an atmosphere of respect for all people. It is important to ensure that all individuals have an equal opportunity to enjoy a fair, safe, and productive work environment. Laws and policies help ensure that diversity is respected and that everyone can enjoy these privileges.
Sexual Harassment Prevention Training Course Includes:
- Preventing harassment in the workplace
- What is sexual harassment?
- Unwelcome conduct
- Where can sexual harassment occur?
- Bystander intervention
- Promoting active bystander culture
- How to intervene
- Protected activities
- Supervisor's responsibility
- Mandatory reporting
- Reporting sexual harassment
- Requirements for a harassment prevention policy
- Legal protections
- Sexual harassment case studies
- Flashcard review
- Student acknowledgement statement
- Proof of training
- Course evaluation
- Certificate of completion
- Customizable documents: policy templates
Workplace Harassment Prevention is also available through the following offer:
California employers with five or more employees must provide sexual harassment training to all supervisory and nonsupervisory employees by January 1, 2021. Employers with 50 or more employees were already (and are still) required to train supervisors every two years. An employer that has provided this training to an employee in 2019 is not required to provide refresher training and education again until two years thereafter.
Employers' obligations to supervisory employees are as follows:
- Employers must provide at least two hours of training to all supervisory employees in California.
- Employers must provide new supervisory employees training "within 6 months of the assumption of a supervisory position."
Employers' obligations to nonsupervisory employees are as follows:
- Employers must provide at least one hour of training to all nonsupervisory employees in California.
- Employers must provide new nonsupervisory employees training "within 6 months of hire."
Seasonal, temporary, or other employees who are hired to work for less than six months must receive training within 30 calendar days after the hire date, or within 100 hours worked, whichever occurs first, beginning January 1, 2020.